NRS 41B.400 Payor
or other third person who pays or transfers forfeited property, interest or
benefit.

NRS 41B.410 Person
who acquires or receives forfeited property, interest or benefit without legal
right or authorization.

NRS 41B.420 Killer
who transfers forfeited property, interest or benefit to third person; effect
of preemption by federal law.

_________

GENERAL PROVISIONS

NRS 41B.010Definitions.As
used in this chapter, unless the context otherwise requires, the words and
terms defined in NRS 41B.020 to 41B.160, inclusive, have the meanings ascribed to
them in those sections.

NRS 41B.030“Agent” defined.“Agent”
means a person who is authorized to represent or act for another person. The
term includes, without limitation, an attorney-in-fact under a durable or
nondurable power of attorney or a person who is authorized pursuant to the
provisions of a governing instrument to make decisions concerning the provision
of health care to another person.

NRS 41B.040“Beneficiary” defined.“Beneficiary”
means a person who is entitled to accrue, acquire or receive any property,
interest or benefit pursuant to the provisions of a governing instrument or the
laws of intestate succession.

NRS 41B.060“Community property with right of survivorship” defined.“Community property with right of
survivorship” means community property in which a right of survivorship exists
pursuant to NRS 111.064 or 115.060 or any other provision of law.

NRS 41B.090“Governing instrument” defined.“Governing
instrument” means any of the following:

1. A deed or any other instrument that
transfers any property, interest or benefit.

2. An annuity or a policy of insurance.

3. A trust, whether created by an
instrument executed during the life of the settlor, a testamentary instrument
or any other instrument, judgment or decree, including, without limitation, any
of the following:

(a) An express trust, whether private or
charitable, and any additions to such a trust.

(b) A trust created or determined by a judgment
or decree under which the trust is to be administered in the manner of an
express trust.

4. A will, a codicil or any other
testamentary instrument, including, without limitation, a testamentary instrument
that:

(a) Appoints a person to serve in a fiduciary or
representative capacity, nominates a guardian or revokes or revises another
will, codicil or testamentary instrument; or

(b) Excludes or limits the right of a person or
class of persons to succeed to any property, interest or benefit pursuant to
the laws of intestate succession.

5. Any account or deposit that is payable
or transferable on the death of a person or any instrument that provides for
the payment or transfer of any property, interest or benefit on the death of a
person.

6. A security registered as transferable
on the death of a person.

7. Any instrument creating or exercising a
power of appointment or a durable or nondurable power of attorney.

8. Any instrument that appoints or
nominates a person to serve in any fiduciary or representative capacity,
including, without limitation, an agent, guardian, executor, personal
representative or trustee.

9. Any public or private plan or system
that entitles a person to the payment or transfer of any property, interest or
benefit, including, without limitation, a plan or system that involves any of
the following:

(a) Pension benefits, retirement benefits or
other similar benefits.

(b) Profit-sharing or any other form of
participation in profits, revenues, securities, capital or assets.

(c) Industrial insurance, workers’ compensation
or other similar benefits.

(d) Group insurance.

10. A partnership agreement or an
agreement concerning any joint adventure, enterprise or venture.

11. A premarital, antenuptial or
postnuptial agreement, a marriage contract or settlement or any other similar
agreement, contract or settlement.

12. Any instrument that declares a
homestead pursuant to chapter 115 of NRS.

13. Any other dispositive, appointive,
nominative or declarative instrument.

2. A beneficiary or a person who would be
a beneficiary if another person were found to be a killer of a decedent;

3. A person who serves in any fiduciary or
representative capacity with respect to any property, interest or benefit that
is in any way related to a decedent, the decedent’s estate or a governing
instrument or a person who would be entitled to serve in such a capacity if
another person were found to be a killer of a decedent; or

4. A person who has a right to or claim
against any property, interest or benefit that is in any way related to a
decedent, the decedent’s estate or a governing instrument or a person who would
have such a right or claim if another person were found to be a killer of a
decedent.

NRS 41B.120“Joint tenants with right of survivorship” defined.“Joint tenants with right of survivorship”
means two or more persons who hold any property, interest or benefit under
circumstances that entitle one or more of the persons to the whole of the
property, interest or benefit on the death of one or more of the other persons.

NRS 41B.200General rule; killer cannot profit or benefit from wrong;
anti-lapse statute and right of representation; contingent, residuary and other
beneficiaries; common law.

1. Notwithstanding any other provision of
law, the provisions of this chapter apply to any appointment, nomination,
power, right, property, interest or benefit that accrues or devolves to a
killer of a decedent based upon the death of the decedent. If any such
appointment, nomination, power, right, property, interest or benefit is not
expressly covered by the provisions of this chapter, it must be treated in
accordance with the principle that a killer cannot profit or benefit from his
or her wrong.

2. The provisions of this chapter do not
abrogate or limit the application of:

(a) The anti-lapse provisions of NRS 133.200 or the right of
representation, as defined and applied in chapter
134 of NRS, with respect to a person who is not a killer of the decedent;
or

(b) Any provision of a governing instrument that
designates:

(1) A contingent or residuary beneficiary
who is not a killer of the decedent; or

(2) Any other beneficiary who is not a
killer of the decedent.

3. The provisions of this chapter do not
abrogate or limit any principle or rule of the common law, unless the principle
or rule is inconsistent with the provisions of this chapter.

1. If a court in this state or any other
jurisdiction enters a judgment of conviction against a person in which the
person is found to have been a culpable actor in the felonious and intentional
killing of a decedent:

(a) The conviction conclusively establishes for
the purposes of this chapter that the person feloniously and intentionally
killed the decedent; and

(b) The person shall be deemed to be a killer of
the decedent.

2. Notwithstanding the provisions of NRS 48.125 or 51.295 or any other provision of law, a
judgment of conviction described in subsection 1, including, without
limitation, a judgment of conviction based upon a plea of nolo contendere, is
admissible in any civil action brought pursuant to the provisions of this
chapter.

3. For the purposes of this section:

(a) A court in “any other jurisdiction” includes,
without limitation, a tribal court or a court of the United States or the Armed
Forces of the United States.

(b) A court “enters” a judgment of conviction
against a person on the date on which guilt is admitted, adjudicated or found,
whether or not:

(1) The court has imposed a sentence, a
penalty or other sanction for the conviction; or

(2) The person has exercised any right to
appeal the conviction.

(c) A killing in this state that constitutes
murder of the first or second degree, as defined in NRS 200.010, 200.020 and 200.030, or voluntary manslaughter, as
defined in NRS 200.040, 200.050 and 200.060, shall be deemed to be a felonious
and intentional killing.

NRS 41B.260Civil action: Parties; burden of proof; evidence; stay of
proceedings; limitation on time for commencement.

1. For the purposes of this chapter, an
interested person may bring a civil action alleging that a person was a
culpable actor in the felonious and intentional killing of a decedent. An
interested person may bring such a civil action whether or not any person who
is alleged to be a killer in the civil action or any other person is or has
been, in a separate criminal action, charged with or convicted or acquitted of
being:

(a) A culpable actor in the felonious and
intentional killing of the decedent; or

(b) A culpable actor in any other offense arising
out of the facts surrounding the killing of the decedent.

2. If an interested person brings a civil
action pursuant to this section, the court shall determine, by a preponderance
of the evidence, whether a person who is alleged to be a killer of the decedent
was a culpable actor in the felonious and intentional killing of the decedent.
If the court finds by a preponderance of the evidence that a person who is
alleged to be a killer of the decedent was a culpable actor in the felonious
and intentional killing of the decedent:

(a) The finding of the court conclusively
establishes for the purposes of this chapter that the person feloniously and
intentionally killed the decedent; and

(b) The person shall be deemed to be a killer of
the decedent.

3. If, in a separate criminal action, a
person is charged with being a culpable actor in the felonious and intentional
killing of a decedent or with any other offense arising out of the facts
surrounding the killing of the decedent and:

(a) The person is acquitted of the charge;

(b) The charge is dismissed; or

(c) A verdict or judgment is not reached or
entered on the charge for any reason,

Ê evidence
concerning any such matter is not admissible in a civil action brought pursuant
to this section.

4. Upon its own motion or the motion of an
interested person, the court may, in whole or in part, stay the proceedings in
a civil action brought pursuant to this section during the pendency of any
separate criminal action that has been brought against a person who is alleged
to be a killer in the civil action. The provisions of this subsection do not
limit the power of the court to stay the proceedings in the civil action for
any other reason.

5. A civil action described in this
section may not be commenced by an interested person more than 5 years after
the interested person discovers or through the use of reasonable diligence
should have discovered the material facts that constitute the cause of action.

1. A killer of a decedent forfeits any
appointment, nomination, power, right, property, interest or benefit that,
pursuant to the provisions of title 12 of NRS or the common law, accrues or
devolves to the killer from or through the estate of the decedent, including,
without limitation:

(a) An intestate share.

(b) An elective share.

(c) The share of an omitted spouse or child.

(d) A family allowance.

(e) A homestead allowance.

(f) Any exempt property.

2. The intestate estate of the decedent
passes as if the killer had predeceased the decedent, and any other
appointment, nomination, power, right, property, interest or benefit described
in subsection 1 must be treated as if the killer had predeceased the decedent.

1. Except as otherwise provided in NRS 41B.320, a killer of a decedent forfeits any
appointment, nomination, power, right, property, interest or benefit that,
pursuant to the provisions of a governing instrument executed by the decedent
or any other person, accrues or devolves to the killer based upon the death of
the decedent.

2. In addition to any forfeiture required
by subsection 1, if a governing instrument provides for the payment of certain
benefits only upon the death of a decedent, a killer of the decedent forfeits
any right or interest that the killer is entitled to assert against those
benefits on the basis that community property was used, in whole or in part, to
purchase the governing instrument or to pay one or more contributions or
premiums that were related to the governing instrument.

3. If a killer of a decedent forfeits any
appointment, nomination, power, right, property, interest or benefit pursuant
to this section, the provisions of each governing instrument affected by the
forfeiture must be treated as if the killer had predeceased the decedent.

NRS 41B.320Community property with right of survivorship and joint tenants
with right of survivorship.

1. A killer of a decedent forfeits any
right of survivorship in property that, at the time of the killing, was held by
the decedent and the killer as community property with right of survivorship or
as joint tenants with right of survivorship.

2. If a killer forfeits any right of
survivorship pursuant to subsection 1:

(a) The respective interests in the property held
by the decedent and the killer:

(1) Shall be deemed to be severed and
transformed into tenancies in common; and

(2) Are presumed to be undivided equal
interests in the property, unless a personal representative of the decedent
establishes that the contributions made by the decedent concerning the property
exceeded the contributions made by the killer; and

(b) The interest of the decedent passes as the
separate property of the decedent and as if the killer had predeceased the
decedent.

NRS 41B.400Payor or other third person who pays or transfers forfeited
property, interest or benefit.Except
as otherwise provided by specific statute, if a payor or other third person, in
good faith, pays or transfers any property, interest or benefit to a
beneficiary in accordance with the provisions of a governing instrument, the
payor or other third person is not liable to another person who alleges that
the payment or transfer to the beneficiary violated the provisions of this
chapter unless, before the payment or transfer, the payor or other third person
had actual knowledge that the beneficiary was prohibited from acquiring or
receiving the property, interest or benefit pursuant to the provisions of this
chapter.

NRS 41B.410Person who acquires or receives forfeited property, interest or
benefit without legal right or authorization.

1. Except as otherwise provided in
subsection 2, if a person, without legal right or authorization, acquires or
receives any property, interest or benefit forfeited by a killer pursuant to
the provisions of this chapter, the person is required to transfer the
property, interest or benefit to the beneficiary who is entitled to it pursuant
to the provisions of this chapter, or the person is liable to such beneficiary
for the value of the property, interest or benefit.

2. The provisions of subsection 1 do not
apply to a person who:

(a) Acquired the property, interest or benefit
for value and without notice; or

(b) Received the property, interest or benefit in
full or partial satisfaction of a legally enforceable obligation and without
notice.

NRS 41B.420Killer who transfers forfeited property, interest or benefit to
third person; effect of preemption by federal law.

1. If a killer, for value or otherwise,
transfers to a third person any property, interest or benefit forfeited by the
killer pursuant to the provisions of this chapter, the killer is required to
recover and transfer the property, interest or benefit to the beneficiary who
is entitled to it pursuant to the provisions of this chapter, or the killer is
liable to such beneficiary for the value of the property, interest or benefit.

2. If any federal law preempts any
provision of this chapter requiring a killer to forfeit any property, interest
or benefit and the property, interest or benefit accrues or devolves to the
killer because of the preemption, the killer is required to transfer the
property, interest or benefit to the beneficiary who, in the absence of the
preemption, would have been entitled to it pursuant to the provisions of this
chapter, or the killer is liable to such beneficiary for the value of the
property, interest or benefit.